That should be TOTALLY noticeable right? But I don't notice any latency, just tons of popping. So it makes me wonder why, when I open up the audio options section, the playback buffer says that it's set to 105 milliseconds of latency. On my old computer which is not NEARLY as powerful, the noise never occurred AND there was never any latency in the playback that I could notice. Pardon my noobediness but it really is a mystery to me. Let me tell you what's been going on with this. You'll need to adjust the volume externally or within the program, not windows volume mixer. One last thing, ASIO doesn't have volume control unlike the Kmixer. This will treat each ASIO instances independent of each other thus allowing you to play multiple applications at the same time (multiclient). There is a workaround if you don't want to go back and forth between applications. Disable Spdifout from the control panel as well if you're not using spdifout.
#WHY DOES FL STUDIO ASIO CRACKLE DRIVER#
Disable the midi driver within the program, and reset the ASIO by disabling then enabling it again in the asio control panel.
#WHY DOES FL STUDIO ASIO CRACKLE DRIVERS#
Midi drivers will prevent ASIO from taking ahold of the program should they be active on startup. You'll need to do this back and forth between applications. Once you've freed up a slot, you can enable the other application. You must release the driver by stopping the application from playing or opening the asio control panel and disabling it. That means an application will take "ahold" of the asio driver during use and another application will not play (it will either not play, is muted, or gives you an error). You cannot play audio in two or more applications at the same time. You can only run one instance at a time per device or channel. A note about using ASIO4ALL or ASIO in general.